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§ PIPLY?WELL, DON Tt PeopkNohce[t Drive Them | Off with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets‘ facewillnotembamyou t a package of fiu:m The siin successful substitute for calomel: there’s no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effec- tively, but their action is gent.le and safe instead of severe and gn No one who takes Olive Tablets |s ever cursed with a “dark brown taste,” .Abad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” eeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad d.%oanm or pimply face. e Tablets are a purely vegetable pound mixed with olive ml you will L-now them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent yem-s among pa- tients afflicted -with liver and bowel complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take ouéor twc nightly for a week. See how much Letter vou fee! and lock. 10c and 25c. Norwalk.—The city's garbage col- lection system cost $10,813 in 1909. ght men and four teams are em- ploved d. m the coilection service; two men work four days a week car- zular municipal d four carts Eases qucldy When You Apply a Little Musterole. And Musterole won't blister like the old-fashioned mustara plastex Just spri=d it on with your fingers. 1t penetrates to the sore spot with a gentle tingle, loosens the congestion and draws out the soreness and pam. Musterole is ‘a clean, white vint- ment made with oil of mustard. It is fine for quick relief from sore: throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, stift headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum- bago, pains and aches of the back or joints, ~prams,soremuscles.bnuses,cml- blains, frosted feet, colds on the chest. Nothing like Musterole for croupy chil- dren. Keep it kandy for instant use. 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50, January Economy Sale ALL THIS WEEK | This big sale, with its countless opportunities for saving money will continue all this week. In our first big adver- tisement we listed a very large number of special bargain This long list has been added to, and although some of the Economy bargains have been completely disposed of there are still almost as many chances to save as there were items at first. Wash Goods Dep’t SAMSON HOLLAND " ECONOMY SALE 33c GINGHANS ar in solid col- cs, O‘AO'VIY PRICE 29¢ hes 4 ECONOMY PRICE 29¢ GENUIN RIPPLETTE, d. In all d seersucker " ECONOMY PRICE 2%¢ Domestics and White Goods COTTON HUCK TOWELS Value 350—— ECONOMY PRICE 25c Valug 59— ECONOMY PRICE 42 TURKISII TOWELS lue 15c— ECONOMY PRICE 10c ¢ yalue— ECONOMY PRICE 25¢ sic value— ECONOMY PRICE 29¢ value- ECONOMY PRICE 45¢ BLEACHED CRASH—Cot- ton and Linen worth 42c a ECONOMY PRICE 33c 44c Crash—red and blue plaid. ECONOMY PRICE 34c 43¢ value— ECONOMY PRICE 39c ,\mncnmzzn DAMASK 88-inch, value 90 SALE PRICE 75¢ value $2.50- SALE PRICE 31.50 72-inch, are | ! taking 1n do what lie w: DANIELSON The .body of Christian G. Ritter, murder vietim, was forwarded from Danielson by Undertaker L. E. Ken- nedy on the boat train Monday even- ing to Westchestety N. ¥, whete burial will take place. Tomorroyw (Wednesday) afternoon, at_the. Congregational church. here, funeral” services .are to® be .Held for Miss ‘Eisie Rose’ Kimber, another of those who met such swift and horri ible deaths-at’the hands ‘of Victor Lippo- nen, the madman whoterrorized a section of the western part of the town of Brooklyn during - .Saturday forenoon. Lipponen himself-and the four days’ old infant of which he is the father and which ‘met death indirectly through his fiendish outbreak,’ will be taken - bagk to Brooklyn today to be placed ‘in -a tomb, where the bodies! Will await: burial ‘until spring. Up to Monday afternoon ~no ar- rangements had heen completed for the funeral of Mrs., S2lma Luonial {he nurse whom Lépnonen killet atsh] home, but her husband. a resident of BrooKlyn, and her brothers, who have arrived here from New York, will ‘ar- range for the funcral to take place today or Wednesdat. At the Day Kimball Putnam, Mrs. Lippon murderer_and Mrs C s Ray, who wounded, were resting as as could be cxpected un- hospital D in wife of the the circumstances and the hope was strengthening that Mrs. Rav. who emd to he done to death Saturday \fternoon, may possibly recover, but her name is still on the dangzer list. During Suhday and Menday . the morbidly curious flocked tn the under- rooms of L.. F. Kennedy in| Furnace street to gaze unon the mur- derer and his victims—a gruesome sight that will plague many a memory for vears to combe. Nothing esnecially important in ad- dition to what thev had learned dur- ing Saturday and Sundav eame tao the attention of officials Mond 1o the terrihle crime. As shedding some light on Lip- nonen’s, personality. his moods and his temperment, it was stated Monday ihat for a time during the, fall he had heen ‘employed a helper to men who were ins new machines at the plant of the Quinebaug compan here, ay relative The man was habitual'v sullen in his | et eanor and mnrch of the t'me mut- tared to hi f ing Ouine that r'n!n(n show heen one of the t, but the pav- aturs “and that he '\nrlmd there up to a v weeks ago. Mr. Gardner now the man clearly’ and says th: < quiet and had Yitla te was not to'd unless he felt and that he showed like doing it AINSOOK. ECONOMY PRICE 29¢ PILLOW CASES—size 42 by 36 and 45 by 36— ECONOMY SALE PRICE 5% \HFrT\ AT SALE PRICES value 72 by 90-- SALE PRICE $1.50 NKETS AT . ECONOMY PRICES. WHITE AND TAN CGTTON BLANKETS. The est size“made, heavy .and warm. A wonderfully pleasing offer ECONOMY PRICE $4.00 $7.00 and $8.00 'BLANKETS in gray, tan or white. Ful ize, heavy, weight blankets, fully worth ‘the original price— ECONOMY PRICE $6.00 WE OFFER ON& WHITE AND GRAY BLAN KETS—very heavy, full-size wool blankets which will zive + excellent service, - and would be cheap at $8.50 a pair— * ECONOMY PRICE $7.50 Hosiery and Underwear Department: 45c WOMEN’S LISLE HOSE in black, with double sole and wide ‘gartsr hem. Sizes 8% 1o 10%— ECONOMY PRICE 39 WOMEN’S FULL FASH- JONED SILK LISLE, in dark tan only. Value $1.25— ECONOMY PRICE 98¢ $2.50 SILK HOSE, in bronze, cordovan and white, full 'ia<h- ioned— ECONOMY PRICE 52.24 6ic OUTSIZE HOSE, or cordovan— ECONOMY PRICE 58¢c in gray 0 other imhca ns of bsmg stubborn. Mr. Gardner describes Lipponen as a powerfully built man ' of stocky stature and avith a_tremendously big arm development. It was with these gorilla-like arms that = Lipponen, swinging a<heavy axe, beat down his | victims Saturday. : When the work on swhich Lipponen 1 was engaged in installing machinery {was completed at the mill, a little more than two weeks ago, Mr. Gard- | ner offered Lipponen a steady job with the ‘utside force employed at the plant, but the Finn refused, declaring he ‘did not wish to work any longer. From all parts of eastern Connectis cut persons have been flocking out to the location of Lipponen's crimes for the purpose of mspecting the - vicini The. country out in that strictly agricultural section of Brooklyn is hlanketed now under a.deep snow .and can be reached over a highway that none too good for motor trayel. These handicaps, however, seem- not in the least to abate the curiosity of those who would see what remains to be.seen and they come through the day to look, and ask questions throughout the neighborhood. Tn telling of his. chase after : Lip- | ponen, Denuty Sheriff Edwin Bennett, of Brooklyn, said Monday morning that, had he been using a sleigh in- stead of ‘his automobile, with which |he broke through the deep snow and underlying crust with great ‘diifienltv. makinz very little speed, he might with his companion. Harry Lathrop, overtaken Lipponen before he com- mitted ide. At it was. Lipponen’s hody was still warm when the sheriff and Mr. Lathrop came upon him hanging in the woodshed 1t%!w De Carlo place | and life had departed only a few min- |utes. At first the sheriff was uncertain [ that Lipponen was really dead. so | the officer felt of his.pulse and then of his stomach to be certain that life really was extinct. Tt was.the sheriff’s ambition to get Lipponen alive, but " in this he was disappointed. The crime’ received the most wide- snread: publicity of any happening in Windham county in many years. In handling the big story some liberties were taken by the b'g city dailies with the rea] facts, and one Boston paper published, Mondag, a photograpii of | Cecilia ana Stephen Ritter as among | those murdered. Happily, = however, | { these children escaned unhnrt, though | they saw their father actually slaugh- tered before their eyes. * In the town court Monday morning. George Pratt. Jr. of Hartford was {presented before Judge ~W. Fenner | tWoodward to answer to a charge of {uBlating the motor vehicle laws. | Pratt was the driver of the®car that i wreeked a - closed car owned by C. | H. Pellett of Danielson in an accident {on the state highway, between Day- ville and Attawauean, a few davs ago. The case against Pratt was nolled up- on payment of costs. It was stated that Mr.. Praft reached a satisfactory set- PSWICH HOS! Value 3%c— jloe ECONOMY PRICE 33¢ alue — ECONOMY PRICE 3% ue 50 ECONOMY PRICE 43¢ INFANTS' COTTON in black, white and tan. ; Sizes 4% to 6%. Value 29¢— ECONOMY PRICE 25¢ CHILDREN'S. “HARVARD MILLS” UNDERWBAR—Halt wool and cotton Vests and Draswers, in sizes 2 to 9. Reg- ular price $1.35 to $2.10 ac- cording to size— ECONOMY PRICES $1.20 TO $1.89 v HOSE, Dress Goods Dep’t BLACK. AND WHITHR PLAIDS, which are now sell- ing for $1.00 a yard. Width 42 inches— ECONOMY PRICE 78¢ $2.00 POPLIN, in forty-inch width. -All wool, in navy, plum and green— ECONOMY PRICE $1.7% 54-INCH ALPINE COATING, in handsome heather mix- tures. Heavy weight and worth $4.00 a yard— ECONOMY PRICE $3.49 $4.50 JERSEY CLOTH, in six of the best colors. Width 54~ inches. Fine ' for Suits or Dresses— ECONOMY PRICE $338 $500 JERSEY CLOTHS, I heather mixtures. K It is 354 inches wide, 4nd the colorings are medium and dark— ECONOMY PRICE §448 tlement with Mr. Pellett for wrecking his car, which was very badly dam- aged. At the carhouse in Dayville a line of the Shore Line Electric HElectric Railway caught fire recently and was practically fl_eéxtroyed. The Weather Man kept up his Arc- tic temperature specialty during Mon- day, when he turned in a 7-below zero mark to add to the records of the winter. Christian “G. Ritter, who was killed in Brooklyn by Victor Lipponen, was one of the men who had a Brooklyn contract for transporting school chil- dren. Drifting snow, driven about by. the gale of Sunday night blocked the trol- ley. line between North Grosvenordale connections with the local line for a time. The ‘Miracle Man, the feature pic- ture shown at the Orpheum theatre Mondap afternoon and evening. proved one of the- finest films shown here in a longz time and was very popular. The story of how a gang of crooks \finally Se the light of faith and are converted from their evil ways holds a particular appeal in these days of wirld-wide turmoil. Since Saturday’s terrible crime in Brooklyn scores of people have asked the aues! ‘““Was Lipponen a’drink- ing man?’ So far as can be ascer- tained from inaquiry in many quarters Lipponen was not a drinking man. An agree that he was reticent, sullen and repulsive to friendships,” and, even in death, his face seems a mask of ugli- ness and evil-mindedness. He looks {_l;c part for the tragedy he staged in ife. Clean out vour chimneys, authorities. From all narts of the sur- rounding country come stories of chimmey fires——brought ahout through, forting fires that are getting draft through dirty r-himnnys, Danielson has escaped any serious fire so far, but the danger is known to be great. especially during * extremely ~ cold weather when fires are being forced harder than is usual. Henry Myers and Miss Myrta Doane both of Danielson, went to Norwich —— BORN 0'('0\'¢Em,—rn New London, Jan . a_daughter to Mr. O'Connell 6% 31 say 1! ® Norwich_Jan. 19, rnest Legs, at - arsonage, Henry My- na Niigs Myrta Doane, both of Jan. 17, Cn\arle\ H. Ricketts; ay Miner of Yantic and f T Town. nice KERATUSS — Tn Norw! 18, 1920, Katherine Krauss, ag _years and L Jonth, wife of ' John Krauss of a \\edne;da). Y«\n Burial in ~ Ames , Jan. 16, 1920, dughn, aged 67! be held at his ues- Kindly The death Frank Johnson of friendship which, members of our C. over forty-five years s An un of \[* some of the ratlon, starts 1f {s-that who has overseen tie | s Company “shown not enly to large circ Ity to the interests that is_an_ exampl may well he follow d, these act! beinz continued il within a Tt month of the close of his long and busy 1ife. Be Tt Resolved: That we Com cate our sincere s athy to hi: and far bereavement and enter t minute on the.records of the Company. THE REID & VF GHES CO. Norwich, Jan. 16, 1920, CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank the Beck Company, relatives. & Hill the Plaut-Cadden Company, friends ‘and neighbors for anii for n ngs, pathy their my late JAMES J. COGGINS. 19, 1920. bereavement Norwich, Jan. 1IN MEMORIAM. In \sad and loving memory of STEPHEN CROOK, Who Died Jan. 19, 1919. There 18 one link that cannot sever ever, His Sister, MRS. JONATHAN SMITH, SR. Norwich Town: 15 Main Street Fuaneral Directors —AND— Embalmers Lady Assistant _ Telephone 328-3 HENRY E. CHURCH WM. SMITH ALLEN A - Shea & Burke . 41 Main Street ‘Funeral Directors and Webster causing a, suspension of || the | A loving remembrance that lasts for- | A Story. of Life in tl\. Lilfi(l lhd Shadows in “Gay. Paree’—SEE IT * Edna hort Story Classic “THE GA OLD DOG” A6 Pcrt H mai story Futurmg JOHN' CUMBERLAND ‘it Isn't All Gmm Net ‘All the Time | e e " Wild Waves and - Women : sunsmus com:nv iyt NEW SHOW 1 'rouoanom. i Auafisflu BITOU, DENMAN THOMPSON‘S Prices 25¢, 50c, 51-W¢ $1.50 . Plus War Tax ‘and Best Play. Oldest’ An Unusual Coune of Three UNDER Y. M. C.- A. AUBPICES THE FAMOUS LotusMaleQuanetudRuder —THE— CRAWFORD .ADAMS CO The Venetian Musicians $125 FOR THE COURSE Tickets at Y. M. C. A. and Barrows’ Shoe Store SEE ANNOUNCEMENT AMonday afternoon and were married by Rev, Ernest A. Legg, for five years pastor of the Danielson Methodist church. The ceremony was perform- ed at 5 o'clock at the parsonage of Trinity M. E. church, 67 Lafayette street, Rev. Mr. Legg now being pas- tor of the Norwich church. Mr. Myers and his bride were unattended and left at once for their newly furnished home on Mechanic stteet, ‘Danielson. Mr Myers, who is a well known Sam’s forces in France and Germany and the last of the: Killingly boys to return from active service. PUTNAM The police were searching Monday for Salvatore Sposito; who is wanted to answer to a charge ~of shooting Vincent Gerard in an affair that took place nea rthe corner of Main and Proyidence street, about 2 a. m. Mon= day. Cerard is at the Day Kimball hospi- tal with a bullet wound in the leg and while his injury isof a serious mature, it is° not regarded as endnngerlng his life. Captain Bulger, of the police, said Monday .afternoon that, according to the information he had obtained-rel- ative to the case, Sposito and Gerard were on their way home, after spend- ing the evening at a place where hard cider was being sold, and were getting sudden demand upon Gerarq for mon- ey, The .captain understands that ‘Ger- arg told Sposito that he had only about $2 with him and that he would let him have that if he wanted it, but this, apparently, ‘did not satisfy Sposito, and he opened fire on: Gerard. One of the bullets went wild, but the other. struck” Gerard in ‘the leég and he fell to the ground.’' Officer Liard was on duty in ‘that part of the city.and was quickly on Sposito’s trail, but that individual had made a rapid get- {away and could not be located. Ofiicer Chandler responded to a‘call to come to the location of the shoot- ing. Gerard was assisted into" a boarding house nearby ang later sras Sposito. has been ‘a resident in this ity for several vears and recent- bas. been emploved as a member of a New. Haven railroad work train. At the home of his son. Nr. Harry A. Foughton. funeral services. for Al- ~xander A. Houghton were condueted by Rev. Boynton Merrill of the Con- eregational church Monday afterncon pat 2 o'clock. The service was nttended by representatives of the banking, professional and’ business interests of the city, where Mr. Houghton had been a resident for half a century. Rurial was in Grove street cemetery. | The bearers were G. Allen Hawkins, J. Fred Carpenter., Arthur. Tourtellotte, John O. Fox, Silas M, Wheelock and G. Harold Gilpatric. Up to 6 o’clock Mondayv evening, 722 shares of the ninth. series issued by e Putnam Building and Loan Asso- ciation had heen.sold, bringing the campaigners still nearer their goal of 1000. Tt is now thought possible that lis many as 1,500 shares may be sold. The Connecticut St~te grange, at its annual meeting in ITartford. adopted the unfavorable report o! the com- mittee on education on the resolution offered by C. IT. Potter of Woodstock that state supervision of schools be removed as detrimental to rural schools. The commities in making its report said: “We believe that the state grange before advocating such a sweeping ‘change should be thoroughly constructive, something better, and some system that will be thoroughly practical and workable. These re- quirements we do not think the state grange is at present fn a position to fulfiiL” The committee expresseq its belief that there is no more important work to be done by the grange than that of If you have a severe couh or chest rold aecompanied with soreness, throat Jickle, boarseness, or diffienlt ‘breathing, ir if your child wakes up during the* -nrhl: with eroup lnd you want quiek elp, tre’me:}m reliable “old' home-made cougl ist can supply gon with 2% ounces Pinex. Pour his into a pmt bottle nd fill the bo&ue with plain granulated sugar jou ean use ehnlled nolnsel y. or yrup, lf of £ bu demn;’m g‘hu nerpn makes xyt really remarkable cough tastes good, and in spite. of its low em Any it cam be sze upen- to give q-nu;k lasting relief. £ i EE Tael this. take bold o 8 cough Il a. way that nnhs business. it raises the phlegm. Wa throat n&le and soothes and hn!s 3 irritated membranes that line the throat ard Lronckial tubes with such prem /ness; ease and c:mmty that it is real Iy astonishing. tr!'t,l:d“ isa lbt:ll] fud highly }m ated compouad of genuime ne extract, and is probably the best owl means of overcoming severs 'bs, thrpat and chest colds. re’ many, wortbless imitations of this mixture. . ment, ‘ask for “2 | with full direvtions and don’y. thing else. Couaranteed to sdtisfgction or monmey pn\npt !“::‘:hi. Tus Pinex Co, Fi. Wayxe, borough marketman, was with TUncle | along famously when Sposito made a| e STRAND “VAUDEVILLE and MOTION PICTURES THREE SHOWS—2:15, 7:& 8:15 BERT and BETTY ROSS Man and Woman—Full Sta; Cmady Vandy Act “Sterling Saxophone Four Four Men Musical Novelty MYSTIC GARDENS Two Women and One Man in an' Up to Date lllusion Novelty GEORGE BEBAN, 6 Parts - In HEARTS OF MEN One of the Best Pictures the Form- er Paramount Star. Has Ever Been . . The Artist With 4 Soul. A Polverful Appealing Drama. A Picture That Will Go Straight to Your Heart and Linger There as Long as It Beats. ' COMING SOON ECHO OF YOUTH BIG SPECIAL promoting education' not only of the children but of everybody in the community. Use of the grange as a jcenter for Americanization work in each grange community was advo- cated. At the high school Monday, students were interested in strength tests given them and also in the military drill, which has been made a compulsory part of the high school course for the boys. On the strength tests Alfred Barber showed the best record. William Cote, who was in court some time ago to face a charge pre- ferred against’ h.m by Yvonne Lari- viere became the mother of a child recently. On each of two counts, having to do’ with his relationg with Miss Lari- viere, Judge Geissler sentenced Cote to serve six months in jail, a total of| a year, the sentence, with the understanding that Cote will devote his closest at- tention to the welfare of his wife and four children, in whose interest Judge Geissler-refrained from sending Cote to jail,” where, he was warned, he will be sent without ceremony, under the suspended sentence, unless his be- havior i$ exemplary. At ‘the Day Kimball hos;ltal just before six oclock Monday evening, it was stated that Mrs. Charles Ray,-of Brooklyn, who was terribly. injured when she was assauited with an axe| on Saturday by Victor Lipponen, lhei arch-murderer, Wwas slightly better. Mrs, Ray is in.such a highly eritical | condition, however, that her improve- ment ‘does not assure recovery, though the best is to be: lioped for and she hag sfeadily, trough very slowly im- proved since being brought to the hospital. Mrs. Lipponen, wife of the murder- er, also was improving Monday, and her condition wag regarded as quite satisfactory. Donald Holmes, 17, of Pomfret, was| | brought to the Day Kimball hospital |on Monday to receive treatment for a| deep gash in his leg above the knee. The youth was injured with an axe { while he was engaged in chopping wood Sunday and he had lost much blood before he was brought to thl hospital on Monday. i Monday brought another mcrning nf 10 below zero temperature to this city, and. in the afternoon, another snow storm, The shares of the Putnam Building and Loan Association now total 1804, It wag stated here Monday that the members of the fire department, who, during the course of the recent re- organization, had been transferred from active membership to associate but suspended execution of:. {ant membership or from one company to another have been at Norwich to con- sult with counsel relative to bringing action against the mayor, the com- mon counsel and chief of the fire de- partment in order to bring about what is_described as their re-instatement. Whether or not any such action will be brought had not been established up to Monday afternoon. nod had any papers been gerved on city officials up to that time. SEEKS DIVORCE ON CHARGE OF DESERTION In a suit returnable before the su- perior court on the first Tuesday in February, Everett J. Winslow of East Lyme asks divorce from Esther Law- rence . Winslow, now of ' parts un- known. They were married Nov. 5, 1915, and he alleges that she deserted him on Oct. 24 the next year, I The ostrich !ealhers the nest of the owner. - —TODAY— ' NORMA [almadgf In Her Latest Screen Triumph THE ISLE OF CONQUEST A Wreck at Sea—Isoiation on a Tropical Island With a Lone Man —Then Love—A Play of Romance and Adwventure. T CHAS. MURRAY In MAID MAD MACK SENNETT COMEDY PATHE NEWS TS N — DANIELSOX CASINO, STARKWEATHER BLDG. BOWLING and POCKISE su.Lulnl 4 ALLEYS 'ABLES WEDNESDAYS LADIES DAY. Bowling tle sport for all. Prise given away every Saturday. YOU ARE INVITED. FRANK BARBER, Prop. LOUIS E. KENNEDY DANIELSON Undertaker and rémbalmu Ioecial Attertion to Every Detall HOPKINTON Ernest W. Tinkham is spendi: some time in Providence. liver Stoddard, a student & Stratton’s business Providence, was.at his home away one day last week. John Hoxie has beety acting as janitor ‘of the schoolhouse away on account of the David J. Naylor. The Ashaway-Potter Hill. W. in Bry- college. in Ash- recently in Ash- illness of C. T. 1 U. held a well attended watch meetinz in the church at Ashaway last Thurs- day evening. Addresses were made hv Rev. E. P. Mathewson, Rev. D. B, Coon and Rev. George D. Stanley of Westerly, with other exercises, con- sisting of a musical and religious pro- gram, all having reference to the com- ing in of national prohibition. A community social for pupils and patrons of the public schools was held in the Ashaway schoolhouse Thursday evening, with an interesting literary and musical program. Everett DP. Mathewson introduced last week an act in the Rhode Island house of representatives in amend- ment of the act dividingz.the town ef Hopkinton into voting districts. The amendment was simply to change the time of the annual financial town meeting from the Thursday’ before the last Tuesday in May to the Thursday before the last Tuesday in April, a change made necessary by the estab- lishment of a uniform date of assess- ment for the state by an act passed at the 1919 sessfon. Waterbury.—The city of Waterbury is thinking seriously of going into the Insurance business. -Municipal insur- ance of city property asainst loss by fire was the recommendation adopted in a resolution by the board of finance Friday afternoon. HELP FUR MUIHER A mother whose strength is over-wrought or who is thin, ornervous, should find re- newed energy in every drop of SCOTT'S EMULSION Let it help turn your daily tasksfromnbmdentopleasure. Scott’s Emulsion is abundant in thase nourishing ele- ments that every mother . in the land needs. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N.}» 19-10 I dont loaf School and when [ know -Ma's waitin w:th a dlSh of between Home~says .